The Three Pillars of Nokia Strategy - Have All Failed. Why Nokia Must Fire CEO Elop Now

If you have three of your pillars in your strategy failing. All three failing, you must IMMEDIATELY STOP pursuing that strategy, as every day in it, brings you closer to death, to yes, bankruptcy, to oblivion, to complete failure, to junk status as a company, to being a takeover target. If your three pillars in your strategy are failing, you must fire immediately the strategy guy and replace not just the strategy head, but your whole strategy. If every leg of your strategy fails, then yes, ANY new strategy is better. Whatever you did before is better, whatever your competitors are doing is better, anything is better than pursuing a strategy that is 100% failing.

The CEO who executed a strategy where all three legs fail, is clearly incompetent, and must be fired immediately. If the Board waits, then the Board is either asleep at the wheel, or incompetent, or in collusion with the incompetent CEO. If the Board waits in firing the CEO of a company where the whole strategy is failing - that Board must be fired instantly as well. This is elementary stuff. A company that finds its three pillars of its strategy all failing, is shrinking in size, is losing customers, is losing market share, is losing consumer and investor confidence, finds its share price rated junk, and is obviously generating increasing losses. This company is at least on the brink of bankruptcy and depending on how much cash it has on hand, it may prolong its life a little, but as long as the company pursues a 100% failing strategy - the company will kill itself.

Windows phone is helping Nokia. It re-invigorated them. They were dated as a company and needed it. It differentiates them.

Yes they needed a new platform, they wasted millions developing MeeGo and tossed it aside without giving it a chance (ironically the N9 sold pretty well for no advertising and a dead OS). MeeGo should have been given more time and if that had failed, Android should have been deployed. I personally really want a Lumia 920 but wont touch WP with a barge pole because it doesn't have any of my 20 most used apps. With Android, sales would have been so much higher at this point easily overtaking most OEMs to become the 2nd biggest Android OEM behind Samsung.

Glad they didn't go with Android personally, just what the world needs, even more Androids, as if there aren't too many as it is. Being a non-Android phone is one of the reasons I went with a Nokia to begin with. Already owned a few, I've had my fill, and was wanting a good alternative to an iOS phone. You know, the whole "more choice is a good thing" speech I keep reading about.

Glad they didn't go with Android personally, just what the world needs, even more Androids, as if there aren't too many as it is. Being a non-Android phone is one of the reasons I went with a Nokia to begin with. Already owned a few, I've had my fill, and was wanting a good alternative to an iOS phone. You know, the whole "more choice is a good thing" speech I keep reading about.

Really? It looks like Windows Phone will be the death of Nokia from all the data I've seen.

That is the ********* graph that I have ever seen in my life. Was that made by a 3rd grader?Nokia deciding on WP is a long term decision. WP8 hasn't even launched yet. If anything, this shows that Nokia's board is willing to make drastic changes to turn the company around.Judging by your posts, this is clearly beyond your grasp.